Quiet Soho is getting fluffed up with news of a new premium retailer landing at 101 Wooster St. between Spring and Prince streets.

Deal maestro Jeff Sutton has just feathered his 4,000-square-foot nest on the ground floor of the mid-block building for Canada Goose. Chanel and Tiffany are among the retailers on the cobblestone block.

The asking rent was $550 a foot, and sources say it will bring in $40 million over the life of the lease that was negotiated for the tenant by Robert Cohen and Michael Cohen of RKF. (The Cohens are not related.)

The space was previously staked out by competing outdoor brand, Patagonia, which moved nearby to 72 Greene St.

The outdoor apparel brand’s distinctive red, white and blue round label depicts the Arctic Circle. Sewn onto its super-warm goose down jackets with thick, coyote fur-trimmed hoods, the label has made its puffers scene-stealers from Sundance to the subways.

Founded in Toronto in the 1950s as a clothing company, its parkas were later designed for Antarctica scientists but in addition, were soon favored by Iditarod racers, Everest climbers, film crews and celebrities including Emma Stone, Jimmy Fallon and Daniel Craig.

Along with less pricey accessories, vests and lighter jackets, its goose down-filled outerwear ranges from its polar bear-patterned “Pup” baby bunting for $295 to a $1,275 men’s “Snow Mantra Parka.”

Just skip your $4 coffee a day, and you’ll be wrapped in one for New Year’s Eve in Times Square.

The Chinese have come up with $175 million in EB-5 money for Michael Shvo, Howard Lorber’s New Valley and Bizzi & Partners Development’s skyscraping 125 Greenwich St.

A further equity raise will soon be overseen by JLL, sources said.

With no height limits, the Rafael Vinoly-designed residential condominium tower is expected to be the tallest in the downtown area with the highest occupied floor at 990 feet.

The crown of the project will have a triplex filled with building amenities before a visually appealing tower topper is expected to bring it further into the clouds.

A sales office is expected to open after Labor Day on the 84th floor of the nearby One World Trade Center.

Both JLL and Shvo spokespersons declined comment.

While industry executives quietly admit the highest-priced sales have slowed all over town, there are pockets of good news for those buildings with views.

Beverly Hills-based Realtor, Aron Kirman, is running around the Big Apple this month with several billionaire foreigners. “They are looking for penthouses in the sky,” he said. “That is what they are used to, and for two of them, security is important.”

Bankrate is checking itself into a full-floor deal of 24,195 square feet representing the entire 22nd floor of 1675 Broadway.

The company, which aggregates financing information on the Web, will relocate and expand from the smaller 4th floor at 477 Madison Ave.

“They rented the floor we have been doing events on,” said Bill Rudin, CEO of Rudin Management, the building’s owner.

Stephen Berliner, Scott Weiss, Peter Cipriano and Brad Wolk of Savills Studley represented the tenant. Robert Steinman, in-house at Rudin, represented the building, which had an asking rent of $75 per foot.

Large tenants in the Wired Certified Platinum building include Publicis Group and Arent Fox.

The Women’s Refugee Commission has signed a 10-year lease at 15 W. 37 St. for its headquarters. The 8,905-square-foot space comprises the entire ninth floor of the 16-story building. The former division of the International Rescue Committee has been located within the IRC offices in the Chanin Building at 122 E. 42 St.